IRISH CASTLES AND KEEPS Pen-Pictures of the Massive Old Piles in the South of Ireland. HOW HON , PYNE PLAYED THE SOLDIERS Clcrrr Itiinn of nn Itigcnlnu * Member of rnrllniiiriit KlMlng tlin ninrnnf Stone HjrVnjnlilo unit 8i-n lilc In tin ) Kinonilil lute. r , I8M.1 LONDON , May. 1 [ Correspondence of Tun Bnr. ] Through the entire south of Ireland , nhd particularly along tlio banks of such rivers as the Harrow , Suir , Black water , Urido and Leo , are found tlio ruins or well preserved remains of hugh square castles , built by the heads of septs and clans at illlTerciit periods during the thirteenth , four teenth , fifteenth , and ; i few as late as the sixteenth , centuries. Whatever the reasons for the same , thcso massive stone keeps for they bore no re semblance to the architecturally beautiful Irish and English castles of the Elizabethan and a still moro modern time seemed to have been constructed with reference to convoying intelligence from ono to another , probably from signal lights from their lofty parapets , as some which are allll standing nro more than 100 feet In heleht. Wherever jjou may saunter along these southern Irish rivers , you will find that there is an uninter rupted low between the sites of the ancient castle ruins. Often they are but two miles rtpart ; frequently from four to six ; but In every Instance they are In view of each Other ; and ancient roads , showing that quick and easy communication was taken Into account , are Invariably found between. Probably three of the most Interesting of thcso massive old structures In the south of Ireland are very near together , and can all bo visited In n day's journey. They are Cas tle Lisilnny , nt the ancient town of Tallow on the river Bride , near the boundaries of counties Watcrford and Cork ; Castle Kllcol- man , on a rivulet flowing into the Awbeg in the northern part of county Cork , and Castle 'Blarney ' , in the beautiful Blarney vale , but inn hour's lovely walk from the winsome city i of Cork , Taken together thcso three are the best existing specimens of the tower 'house or castle of the ancient Irish chief tain j while each in Its way is world famous ' In view of Its distinctive associations. 1 Castle Lisllriiiy stands on the aide of a ' gentle declivity , which ris.cs from the margin - ' gin of the river Bride , with the slrepj old town of Tallow and Its low , gray convent I nestling -in the valley on the southern ttlde. It Is supposed to have been ouilt bv the carl of Desmond , and has undergone but little change during the past 100 years. It con sists of a massive square tower with facades of fully llfty feet and the structure is nearly 100 feet high. Its summit commands a do- Hghtful view of the valley of the Urido , up wards of twenty miles In extent , gemmed with villas , shouted with luxuriant ttirms and dappled at intervals with witching re- vealincnts of the river , hero and there ap pearing like tiny lakes of silver in emerald Bettings of verdure and woodland , The late Douglas Pync , member of Parlia ment for West Waturford , as I knew from personal acquaintancooneof thomostlovable of men , In the fall of 1887 throw the whole United Kingdom and a part of America into roars of laughter from his o'dd and charac teristically Irish mode of avoiding arrest for upwards of three months , with the police , soldiery and a warrant all literally under his very nose. The ' 'seditious offenses" which had brought . .ho law upon him , consisted in tunneling from his own land to the house of n neighboring tenant undergoing siege for eviction , and in this novel manner supplying him now and then in his I'ilemnia with cour- ngo and comfort in the form of an odd bottle of whisky awl a snug hamper of victuals cooked by good Mrs. Pyno herself. Mr. Pyne was considerable of a wag , and as it was October when ho was "summonsed" his crops were all in , and as Parliament did not meet until January he decided to employ the intervening tlmo in having a little fun with the minions of the law. Mr Pyno was tenant of the Ltsfiuny demesne ; and his homo , a few yards from the castle , was one of those old and now al most obsolete mansions of the Iiish gentle man of half a century ago. He had con verted the castle into bj re , barn and btorc- housc. Into this strange structure Pyno and t.vo of his companions retreated , walling up and completely barricading the lower en trance ; and , provided with canned meats , fruits and other edibles , with an unknown quantity of whisky and cigars , here ho grandiosely defied arrest. An entire company of Balfour's soldiers endeavored to dislodge him. But that was impossible. An entrance could not uo ef fected. Even If ono had been made , arrange ments were such within that anywhere from ono to a do/cn tons of rock could hhvo been precipitated upon the invaders. Mr. Pyno from his lofty perch above them , soothingly told the soldiers all this , and much more which made their duties partic ularly agreeable. The situation becoming known , Lisllnny was the center of attraction for all Ireland. Throngs came to Tallow daily to cheer Mr. Pyne , who sagely ad- 1 dressed them on the "wrongs of Ireland" 1 from a window ninety feet from the ground ; while the unfortunate soldiery \\ero the butt of immeasurable and inexpressible ridicule. For thirteen weeks this tremendous farce continued , when finally the great question us to how Mr. Pyno would take his seat In Parliament grew to bo universally discussed. Irish wit and recourse answered this promptly. Suddenly there appeared pla carded all over the counties of Cork and Wutorford a notice that Mr. Douglas Pyno's graying lands would on a certain day bo sublet - lot by aimtion. Toward ovmlng of that day every road leading into Tallow swarmed with Irish cattle and Irishmen , By sunset over 1,000 cattle were bellowing and charg ing around the base of old Lisllnny , Vhllc fully 100 tenant farmers , swearing , protest ing , lighting , managed to have the boldicrc hopelessly stampeded by the excited herds It Is about forty miles byroad from Tallow to Cork harbor. In the melee , a clover rust by Pyno'a friends among the tenantry , tin eminent , offender was lowered from hi : oyrle , and byiolays of .swift horses was a' ' Oueenstown before midnight. The nux : tiling he was in the. south of England , am ten days later , while Balfour's soldiers \\er > still closely guarding old Llslliiny , that tin arrant rebel should not escape , Dougla : Pyno quietly entered the House of Common In London , and gravely took his seat in Par llamcnt , amid such cheers as never trnforo o slnco made the great structure tremble t < Its very foundations , I feel sure that ono after enjoying th glories of the Blackwatcr with those of it sweet and murmurous tributary , the Awbeg and after a tramp from old Doncralle town eotbyu squalid Gipsy encampment ami gorgeous natural environs , to the level tract whoio stand the ruins of Kilcolman castk the l ish Uono : of Hit | oot Sl'enfer woun agree with me in pronouncing the place on of the loneliest spoKs In all Ireland. A vas yale surrounds It , but as far as the eye cu reach there Is scarcely a blgn of habitation The once noble forests have disappeared Only ouo little lake to the aouth can be seen and bcaivhlng in vain for sight or bound o human acthity or nearness , only the gra , of a far horUon-edge settles leadenly dowi upon the Watcrford mountains to the on si the heights of Kerry to the west , the Nagl mountains to the south and the Ballyhowr hills to the north. It is said that from th top of the castle u view of about half th breadth of Iieland was once commanded. I thcro was compensation In that In .Spenser' tlmo it could hardly bo found now. Kilcolman , or the Clll Cohuau In Irlsl moans Column's church. There wore ahov uUty Saints Column , and. any ot these , t one's lining , may bo taken as the palro miint of this particular townland locullt The castle , as the ruins Indicate , howovci remote Its date of construction , must huv been onn of sticngth and Imixirluncu. Hi : toucully it Is known to havu been original ! one of the great earl of Desmond's fortltie castles The lower portion of the great quac rangular keep is in a good state of prose vutlou for about thirty feet fiomthogroumi ono of its side walls , showing a noble wii Uow , rises solidly and tlruily for perhai wcnty-4ve feet Above tub nod a OR MIT : Q n r > & j&k 4d& ! > - - ± - - * - & * * &i * . * JULJW-r-l * inr--r-nn- | A # J GRAND SPECIAL SALE SPECIAL SALE OF XNote These Prices , -OF Bed Room Suits $13.50 Worth $20.00 & * W N 'XJ * ' Bed Room Suits 9. -Worth 17.50 FURNITU ingrain Carpets ; . r 10 'Worth. . ' . ; 40 Hemp Carpets 13 Worth ,7 , 33 Baby Carriages , $2.50. Brussels Carpet. . . .48 Worth 00 worth $5.09 Matting 14 Worth 85 Baby Carriages , $5.00 , Parlor Suits $19.50 , worth $9.50 worth $40.00 Portieres 2.4QI , ' Worth C.OO Parlor Suits $27.50 , Buby CnrriuRoa. $8.75 , . Lace Curtains 00 Worth.4. . - . . 2.50 worth $15.00 worth $30.00 Parlor Suits $45.00 , OilCloth 20 Worth. . V. , 40 Gasoline Stoves. $3.50. wo. tli $75.00 ' worth $0.00 Linoleum „ 38 Worth 57 Plush Rockers $3.50 , Gasoline Stoves , $3.00. worth $7.50 Waitresses 1.75 Worth 3.5Q worth $8.00 Plush Easy Chairs $1.50 , Clocks ! )0 ) Worth 1.75 Gasoline Stoves , $12.50 , worth $9.00 worth $23.00 Springs 00 Worth 2.60 Tapestry Divans $5.00 , Refrigerators , $8.75 , worth $10.50 Chairs 10 Worth. . ; CO worth $15.00 Single Lounges $4.75 , Extension Tables 3 05 Worth 8.50 $12.50 , , Refrigerators * worth $8.50 worth $20.00 A Folding Beds lO.iO Worth v 15.00 $ Bed Lounges $9.40 , X worth $15.00 Folding Beds 13.50 Worth 120.00 Ice Boxes , $4.50 , worth $8.00 Reception Chairs $1.00 , Bedsteads 1.40 Worth 3.50 worth $1.00 Gasoline Ovens , $1.05 , Pillows 40 Worth 1.0 , ) X worth $3.00 Parlor Chairs $2.50 , worth $5.00 Hall Racks : 0.50 Woith : 12.50 Ice Cream Freezers , $1.45 , worth $3.00 Leather Rockers $12.50 , . Mirrors 00 Worth 2.60 Ice Coolers , $1.05 , worth $25.00 worsh $3 50 kw-j Comforts 1.25 Worth 3.00 CentorTables 90 Worth 2.50 IronBeda 9.75 Woith 18.CO U Hair Mattresses 9.50 Worth - . . 17.50 JifrmniT i \ Trn [ And all other goods equally as cheap. "We Sell Hcywood Bubv Carriages. Gtinn's Folding Beds. Monarch Vapor Stoves. Northern Light Refrigerators. Pulaee Folding Beds. Featherstone IJ.iby Carriages. Gem Freezers. Quick Meal GasoliiieStuvus. Free. Free. Erery purchaser of $ . " > 00 worth of coeds or more will receive AN IMPORTED PIiACQTTE ( Spooi3 - / / i/iorf ocj by IIH from Por/s. ) 18 Indies wide and II Inehos hluh , rcurescntliiftliieolo.iiitlfiil children In a irnrdrr. of ( lowers Itisvurr lustily cmbosso'i , decor.'itcd with tlnt-ol , : ml the irardenoi llowers lins every ap- pcan uco of bclnK piilntcd by luind. It 16 without doubt the handsomest premium over given nwuy InOnmha or elscwliiiro. SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS TO PARTIES . RETAILERS OF MERCHANDISE AT WHOLESALE PRICES , JUST STARTING HOUSEKEEPING. OPEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY EVENINGS ONLY 1315-131/7 square Hanking tower still lifts its rough old vails to a probable height of seventy feet , t must have been a weird and dreary pluce or ono of Spenser s Hue nature. Uut three things of the Bravest linport- _ nco to poet , prince or peasant , came to this man in his eleven years of practical bunish- ncnt hero , between 1587 nnd 1590. The first ) f thcso was the chastening and exalting in- lucnce of absolute self-denial The second was In his wooing and marrying a woman 'of mean birth , " who was so loyal , sweet and good that Spenser never know nn unhappy hour on her account during his life , "of birth" for nero uower to women mean t. The other was In his visits to and com munions with his noblu friend , Raleigh , nt nossy old Youghal , n few miles distant upon ho seacoast. Kalelgh , genius and poet that 10 himself was , generously recognized the ; roalLT poet's true greatness ; warmed his loart with sunny hospitalities ; sustained its doubtful drcamitigs with a strong and icartRomo friendship , and in 1589 bodily took .he timorous Spenser to London ; personally ntroduccd him to the queen , and that very year saw the publication of the llrst three jooks of the "Faerie Queen. " These throe good fortunes , despite bitter lluanrlal straits on the one hand , und on the other Irish "rebellions" of such startling frequency that every far line of trees , nko trembling silhouettes against the liorUou , undoubtedly took on the form of Desmond and Tyrone avengeis , made him sing as no English poet before his time had uvor sung. And in thcso trim things of Ins life lay tlio compensations : for thu inter days of poverty In London , where , as the sequel proved , ICugllsh indifference was moro fatal than Irish savagery , brought Him noth ing save the loyalty of his companion "of mean birth ; " and ho was allowed to die In want in the land he had moro intlnltuly hon ored than any other who uwr lived lu It , save Shakospnaro. Thcro is hut little here to remind of Spenser now , So desolate is old Kilcolman and devoid of suggestive as sociation the roglon roundabout , that the pilgrim hither must perforce bring Spenser along in his heart , and build almost the entire - tire fabric of life , homo and haunts fioin his own loving fancy. Only ono real and swout thing is here which will always lumaln as if revealing the radiance of the poofs gentle presence. That is thu nuar llitlo river , Awbog , the "Mulla" of his Joyous verse , more joyous and melodious o\er , as it shiirs of him who sang , on lib sunnybeautoous way to the DlacltwattT ami the sea. There U n&iiilng more beautiful in all Ire land than Cork city , set In htono and terrace against her leafy heights , and the broaden ing river I/cc , which , riblng in the mystic depths of weird , wild Gougmiu 1 Jarre , at thu edge of Kerry , wanders through lovely glens and sunny vales lo where the city and tide meet , and thun blending with the suit water sweeps through the most glorious nnd pic turesque estuary in the uorhl. down past Queenstown to the sea. Hut this has been repeatedly told by word-paintcri galore. My own secret longing led mo Hist and last to ' The groves of Blarney , That look so charming Down by the put-lings Of sweet silent brooks. " One hardly realizes that ho is In Ireland while among these handsomely attired people ple , who , seeking their suburban homes , throng the cars of the little railway leading from Cork along thu sweet shores of a mur muring stream , and for thu short four miles to Blarney one almost luels ho Is again within the atmosphere of the clear-eyed , active , breezy und prosperous folk one al- wajs finds iuAmuiicun und London subur ban railway travel. At the end of this little railway and at thu head of the valley through which it and the stream have run , in a tiny , pookot vale whoso surface IB al most level on either side to the edges of noble wooded bluffs , is the trilling hamlet of Dim aey , and not a stone's throw from tlu station the gra old > Valj [ of Jts world- famous castle rise high above the rich foli age of the sycamore groves and the musical Blarney rivulet bolow. Altogether it is ono of the sweetest and most restful spots you ever beheld. Hlarnoy , the original Irish form of Blarna , means u ' 'little field , " from Blur , a nold , thlb name having been given the place from its location almost in the center of the tiny vale field , which was no doubt u source of rich harvests oven under the rude forms of cultivation m vogue In most ancient times. As nearly as can bo Uetermined , the later popular signification of the word palavering rhodomontade , glib , specious pleading , or wheedling eloquence originated In Lord Clancarty's often promising , when the pris oner of Sir George Carew , to "surrender his strong castle of Blarney , " this very pile , "to the soldiers of the queen , nnd us often in venting some smooth and palatable excuse for exonerating himself from his promise. " But the place no doubt became world-famous through the celebrity of the verses begin ning with the four lines above quoted , at tributed by adopts in ballad literature both t ) FatherProut and HIahard AlfredMIlliKcn , the latter a former Cork attorney. The castle Itself was built In the fifteenth century by Cormao Mao Carthy , "tho Stronur , " and tlio old coignstone , the kissing of which convoys the magic power of "blar- eny , " according to popular legend , at least , Is still intact. It is said that ut ono time it bore the inscription , "Cormao McCarthy Fortts Mo Fieri Focit , A. 13 H40. " It is pre served and held in place by two iron girders between two huge merlons of its northern projecting parapet , nearly 100 feet from the ground. The ancient castellated pile now consists only of a lofty quadrangular keep , with a Imlf-rulncd tower , through which ac cess Is gained by winding stone stairs to tlio batllemeuted parapet above , Huneath the tower and keep ara a number of wonderful dungeon cells , the most truly impressive of those I have found in anv of the castle ruins of Ireland : while u cava of remarkable foniritlou , but a few rods from the castle , permitted of subterranean ingress and egress in ancient times , Once having gamed the lofty parapet , you are among massive ivies , while many shrubs and young trees have snot out toward the sky Irom this strange eerie. Mosses and grasses have almost completely thatched the old ruin , and if you will wait until the chattering tourists have gone and the scold ing daws with the gontluflvening have come , you c.in , as I did in the growsomo and shadowy place , stealthily und unobserved grasp the iron girders , and , at thu risk of breaking your neck , crane your head far out und downward , to glvo the sturdy old "Ular- noy Stone , " u loud , resounding smack ; and then grope your way through the echoing windings of the louuly tower to the dewy , blossom strewn earth below. Kncuu L. WAKE.MAN. I.ulur Suvlni ; Device. BuronesH Clara , brlnijino these do/on pocket liundkorohlofH in which I told you to murk my monogram. Ludy'u Maid Here they are , my lady , Uuroness Uuthow is this ? You haven't marked all of thorn with my monogram ? Lady's Maid Indeed , I have , my lady , 1 marked ono with your monogram und I marked till the others with the word "ditto.11 The No. 0 Wheeler At Wilson with its ro tary movement , Is the lightest running machine In the market , and is unequalled for speed , durability und quality of work. Sold by W. I-rfiiieaster & Co. , 014 South SU- tebnt street. This has L'pen a tough year for the candi dates for admission to the Wc&t 1'olnt mill' tary acaJomy. Of ICO candidates designated to appear before the examining boards only forty-tlirco were successful. AMERICAN GIRL AS A FLIRT She is Generally tiatisfied With Making Con quests Among Single Men. DIFFERENT TYPES OF THE GIDDY CREATURE ACCUBK ! of liolu ? Morn Depraved Th in She Itoally Is A Warning Note Against the i'oullsli llcHtowiil of Affections. However much of a lllrt the average American girl may bo she confines her Held of conquest to the single men. I say the average Hire. But now nnd then , in country places , in lesser cities , and In the largo metropolis , we come upon the excep tion to the rule , and Und a girl who Is not averse to numbering married men among her admirers , oven among her victims A good deal of study und observation of this order of girl has led mo to the following con clusions regarding her : The young women who get their names associated unpleasantly with married ad mirers can bo divided into threucliibsos ; the spoiled girl , who is ovorscntimontal , con ceited and gushing ; the utterly sollish and vain girl , and the overripe girl , I met ono of the llrst typo recently In the heart of the great metropolis. Shu was a beauty , an only child and motherless , and possessed wealth and position , She had gorged her imtur.lllv romantic mind on French novels , and she was utterly spoiled by adulation , TliU Ono T.lUei Married Men. She loved to talk of herself , und she con fessed to mo that slio hud , ut the age of0 , grown quite blase with the monotonous ut- tantiou of adoring > swains , and that she found nothing so interesting now as the ad miration of marriedlmun. "I suppose 1 like them because they are unattainable , " she said quite nonchalantly , "and I confess the nearest sentiment I 'ever felt to love was in spired by n marriedlman. His unhappy do mestic llfo llrst droiy me to him ; ho said he felt I had such a sympathetic nuturo from the very llrst. Poor fellow ! ho is nearly cra/y : nbout mo nowfho fulrly adores the ground I walk on. " "My dear girl , nothing is so uncertain as the Impression u coquettish young woman makes on a married man , " I replied. "Quite likely he is tolling his wife that ho pities thu fool who marries you. He may flutter you nnd pay you compliments galore , and sigh over you Just to so How much you know of human nature ; but ho Is not respecting you , that is osrtatn. He may feel the charm of your beauty , but ho would not defend your good name If ho heard It assailed ; if he is sunlciently lacking In principle to lead you to receive his compromising attentions ho is lacking the honor to defend you from the tongue of gossip. " "Ho would defend mo because ho U In love with me , " she urtred. "Did yon never hear of an unhappily married man really feeling the love of a lifetime for some one ho met afterwards ! " "Onco lu a while that occurs , " I replied. Write for Our 128-page Illustrated Catalogue. Special Haby Carriage Catalogue. Special Refrigerator Catalogue. Special Stove Catalogue. Special Gasoline Stove Catalogue. Mailed Free. We pay Freight 100 Miles. "But you are scarcely the typo of 11 girl to inspire such a passion. A man would a-nuso himself with you , and try to load jouo i.but ho would never lose his head over j on. Your position and wealth and beauty would flutter Ids musculino pride , and he would enjoy thinking ho had power to lure you over con vention's barriers ; but ho would fool n secret contempt for you all the same. You are a spoiled , sentimental girl , whoso Imag ination has gotten the hotter of her head nnd heart. You are wasting sympathy and Jeopardising happiness. Nothing will so effectually drive away desirable suitors from a young girl as the accepted attentions of a married man. " lloro i u Ilopelonn Ctiso. The most hopeless coquette is the heartless girl with an abnormal love of conquest and excitement , who finds with married men the adventure and reckless element noccasary to her happiness. Such a girl Is seldom morally vicious In tlio generally accepted use of ihat term ; she is superficial in her emotionscold , vain and sollish. She likes her freedom and the opportunities of conquest and adventure it affords her. She has no Idea of going wrong , but loves to play about the brink of danger. Her only dobauohory Is that of the Imagination. Having no deep emotions of her own to control , she tempts and arouses these of men , scarcely conscious of her evil influence : slip flies laughing , mocking and moro amused than terrilioA out of danger's reach as soon as it menaces her. She enjoys tlio tragedy of the situation , and has com plete control of herself. She has a cruel ele ment in her nature and enjoys the power to cause pain. She prides herself on being able to make wives jealous. Hoth she and the sentimental girl are given to boasting of their conquests , and of their ability to at tract moil from their wives , Fortunately it is a shallow , weak and bullish typo of man only who is bewitched by her men who lack moral balimco and who seek constantly for some now diversion , and who regard women as their lawful prey Amused , tensed and momentarily aroused by the elusive coquette , they seldom feel a deep passion for her , as their natures are too shallow for more than a passing excitement and drsiro , which ends In resentment nnd anger when she escapes them UnjumljAccuvml. . The world accuses the girl flirt of being far more depraved than she Is. Hers is the depravity of mind without the corresponding depravity of body. Hut the public is slow to bcliovo this. She loses her good name without having committed sin and without having inspired a great love. Her most persistent pursuers forgot her quickly or think of her without regret. The third and most to be pltiej typo of girl , ivhoso name Is marred by association with a married man , is the tvu.'ilpo girl ! She has lived to pass her tiAlh birthday without having loved or murrlod. With moro than ordinary mind , with a hljh ideal of manhood , with strong emotions and In tense longing for love , she sees her girl hood's companions mated one by one , while lior own dreams and hopes slip further and further back Into the past with her llrst youth. Such a girl is liable to bo superior to her early admirers and as she roaches ripe womanhood she finds mental comrade ship In married men only. Then comes the dangerous association with some man whose domestic life is a disappointment and who discovers in her what ho misses at homo. It may bo her pastor , It may bo the family physician , it may bo thu husband of some old schoolmate whom she visits ; but as u streak of liulitnlug sots lire to dry buildings , his glance and touch inlluenco her ripened und craving emotions. She is capable of feeling and inspiring u great passion ; and. unlike cither of thu types already described , she attracts und Is at tracted by men strong in their emotions and of no moan mental cpUowrneuta ; men who Easy Terms. x $10.00 worth of goods $1.00 per week or $ 4.00 per month 26.00 worth of goods 1.50 per week or tt.OI ) per month \ 5000 worth of goods 2. ( JO per week or 8.00 per month 75.00 Wt > rth of goods 2.59 uur week or 10.00 per month 100.00 worth of goo.ls 3.00 per week or 12.00 nor month 200.00 worth of goods 5.00 per week or 20 03 per month have Brown beyond their wives , and who have perhaps lived through years of brain solieitudo and heart hunuor before they mot this girl. .Vtjo When ( Ilrln Are Supposed to lln Miituroil We speak of a youiiK woman of 25 or ! iO as old enough to bo sensible and well behaved ; but , in fact , that is the very time of life whi-n it is most difficult for'tin uiianchored woman to bo prudent or reasonable. From H to 17 a healthy , vigorous pirl Is in danger of im prudence or folly from ignorance of her emo tions ; from 'Jo to iiO she Is in danger from her knowledge of them. The blind and cruel Judgment of Christl.ui communities on this subject is inconsistent with the spirit of Christ , or with the scien tific enlightenment of the present day in other matters. When I hear of a girl in that period of life wno has wrecked her futuie and lost her good name through sonic great act of folly , I am moved with the deepest pity and sorrow She is like the ungathcrcd dend-rlpu fruit that bursts in the sun and falls into the dust bolow. It is all very well for you , with your satis- lied lives , to sit lu judgment and say : "Hut she should have spurned the first approach ; she should have been indig.iant at such u thought ; bho should have shown womanly pride and strength. ' It is not so u.isy to call all Uio3o qualities to your aid when , with iouth slipping bolilud , with lomllnos before , with a huart bri'.ihliijj for sympathy , a brain on lire with fueling , anil VCIUB burst ing with unused vitality , you encounter a boautifiU and alluring temptation. It is so easy to bcliovo at suoh a time that the world is well lost for love ; that one hour of posses sion will bo worth a lifetime ! of disgrace. Hut no moro fallacious idivi ever du/led : the eyes of the soul , Time has yet to show us the pair of lawless loveis who , having given up the world for lovo'b sake , did not rest-nt it if the world tooli them at their \\onl , Love is the light from God's oyi's ; unless Ho smiles approval upon an earthly pabsioa it never brings lupplness or content. The weak and tortured girl who thinks she cannot emluro llfo without the companion ship of a man who is not free to claim her before ail the world would linil she could not bo happy with his companionship. Ono or both would rcgrot the step which debarred them from the respect of their Kind , so dear to the human heart. Love of approbation is very strong in most of us , and it Is well that it is bo. I believe moro lives have been saved from wreolt on the rocks of passion through lava of appro bation than through principle , It may not bo the best motive for rlghtdolng , but It Kives better motives an opportunity to gain the ascendancy later. One would think ttio unhappily married man ought to have strength enough to pro tect the overripe girl against herself ; that hU wider knowledge of human emotions and temptations should fill him with pity for her. Hut It never does , Men have not been taught that bolf control Is necessary to them in these matters , The whole tendency of the world has been toward masculine free dom and bolMndulgctico , and It is not to bo wondered at that ho Is the tempter iimtead of the protector , Wuman ( let * thu Illmne. But It does seem a wonder that ho invaria bly blames the woman when ho rails , Such is the case , however ; and many a passion- blinded girl , who baa believed that the world was well lost for the love of a married man , lives to hear him rocrimate her for leading him astray. It Is the man who llrst and most keenly feels the lush of public blaino. Many a case has come under my observation where the husband has returned to the wife who was never able to make him happy , leaving the girl who was in nvory way endowed to bo his companion , so powerful a factor In human hupplneas was public respect. It li wen for th overripe t'lrl to recall such cases before she yields to the fascinating il lusion held out to her by her emotions and her lover. Nothing elsis In all the range ot human experience h soovuipj\voriiigl.y alluring - i ing as the attr.irtkm of the SWH , and whun , the imagination and the senses are both on fire reason lends but little light , Hut alas for those who live to sit by the ashes of the burned-out senses , among tin- ruins of Imagination ! and this Is an ex perience certain to follow an unlicensed pu sion. The only hope of continue , ! happlnos" in the relation of in in and worn in is In tin strengthening and deepening of the morn- and spiritual nature of both , for physlcn < attraction alone Is a plant that rarely GUI' , lives thu .season. How frail , then , must bt the chances of happiness for the two wh > violate moral laws to sdi/i thu purihhini flower of desire ! Only tiiobu who have bet ; tempted hy its perfume and false splcm and lived to wear the royal rose of a worn love , or those who have plucked it only < see its loaves wither and iilo. leaving tt ugly thorns , ran ro.illio ho.v frail .such liopc of happiness are ! UMA WIIBEI.KK Wn.cox. LOBE fA. lliin'i'ii ' In I'liloi/i I ifr O In tin ) days ( if liilmy Imyh'ii ) I \Vlitm my hnarl WHS glail ami fico , I loved a bonny l-inile. , And HID bonny Hi < luvoil in. . < I And I pk-dui'd h > > r my dnwitlon , With my 11-rtos DII h"r lln. | Pressing Kcntly to my hu.irt Her thin andlon I"r HIKPT tips. Hud she lived aiMlh < i' > ' < if Klio would have b"on my blui'-i'yed wlfo , Hut all the Hvvi'et win Inni-'d l < > blllur Whun iluath tool , her tunilur llfo , Miles bloom above liiirsr no , Moistened by the lo tin I slmdi Timit''h tnimilh ill Vs IIHI forever , To my ho.irtsho Is not du.nl > BROS.1 CIRCUS. K mu of thu Noiv IViturni U'lth Ilio ltik hliow TliN .S usiiii , The enviable reputation won by Itlngllng Hrothcrs' circus in Omaha lust yn ir Is lflt < il > - to bo still further continued by the oxhlbi lions to bo given here on Monday , .Inno.V No show ever gave moro general satisfac tion , and it will undoubtedly be warmly wel coined back to Omaha. It Is of Interest U note that , since last season , the show ha ; been greatly enlarged ; thu inoirn-'erU ) tins been augmented , the performers inerecsed. the snatlng capacity enlarged , and a genera broadening out in alt the departments ac complished , The exhibition now roijulro' three long railroad trains to transport ft from city to city , while the pur/ormances are given m three rings , on two elevated stages and upon u great t'.ilrd-of. u-tnllo track , under thu largent canvas pavilions ever erected. Th mcuagerlo Is credited with bolnf tlio most complete zoological collection It America. whllt < the circus performance h described us a constant success loa of won dors. The acrobats , gymnasts , acrlallsti , and riders number ovcrltouof ICnropo anu America's highest salaried artists , Including Charles \V. Fish , reputed to bo the world' * champion somersault rldor : thu Hrothorr Vernon , the greatest of all trn | > o/o per formers ; a trouuo of gennlno Arabs and a company of J.ipancso acrobats from the court of the Mikado : while thu picturesque features of the exhibition embrace u mar velous spectacular horse ballet , in which 100 equities perform the most astonishing evolu tions ; u school of twenty remarkably trained Mexican horkes ; a series of thrilling hlpi > o < i drome racoss. and an aggregation of otbqr new. rare and striking features such as can hardly fall to delight these who enjoy A thoroughly meritorious circus per/orma cc |